A great home for sale in Abiquiu, NM 87510
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Homes and land for sale in Abiquiu, New Mexico
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#67 El Mirador Drive Abiquiu NM 87510
Off-the-grid active and passive solar adobe with huge patio and charming adobe guest house. All on over 14 acres (more land available if desired). Privacy, great views.
| Price | $219,000 |
|---|---|
| Beds | 2 |
| Baths | 1 full 1 part baths |
| Home size | 1,100 sq ft ($199 / sq ft) |
| Lot Size | 14.25 acres |
| Year Built | |
| Days on Market | 1 |
| Listing Updated | 04/08/10 |
| MLS Number | 201000699 |
| Property Type | Residential, Residential / Single Family |
| Community | Abiquiu |
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Abiquiu Real Estate – #1 County Road 142
Medanales, NM 87548
Set amidst the grandeur of northern New Mexico, the Rio Chama cuts a swath of lush green through the high desert. Leafwater Ranch comprises 52 acres of spectacular land situated along about 1/2 mile of the cottonwood lined river. Property is now Bank Owned and being sold AS IS. Includes irrigation rights.
| Price | $575,000 |
|---|---|
| Beds | 0 |
| Baths | n/a |
| Home size | |
| Lot Size | 52.00 acres |
| Year Built | |
| Days on Market | 106 |
| Listing Updated | 02/23/10 |
| MLS Number | 906458 |
| Property Type | Residential Land |
| Community | Abiquiu |
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11 Rio Arriba Cty Road #163 Abiquiu, NM
87510
La Riata del Barranco in Abiquiu sits above the river with truly the most amazing views of O’Keeffe Country. The property consists of a beautiful home with over 2400 sq.feet, 2bd/2ba, radiant heating with 5 zones, wood flooring, sunroom, cedar-lined closets, custom built cabinets in kitchen with two pantries. The property includes water rights from a natural spring, extensive landscaping, orchards,and many other outbuildings. Exact acreage to be determined – lot to be adjusted to +/- 4 acres.
| Price | $375,000 |
|---|---|
| Beds | 2 |
| Baths | 1 full 1 part baths |
| Home size | 2,400 sq ft ($156 / sq ft) |
| Lot Size | 4.00 acres |
| Year Built | |
| Days on Market | 105 |
| Listing Updated | 02/11/10 |
| MLS Number | 905983 |
| Property Type | Residential, Residential / Single Family |
| Community | Abiquiu |
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| Price | $1,495,000 |
|---|---|
| Beds | 3 |
| Baths | 3 baths |
| Home size | 3,300 sq ft ($453 / sq ft) |
| Lot Size | 30.00 acres |
| Year Built | |
| Days on Market | 89 |
| Listing Updated | 11/02/09 |
| MLS Number | 705157 |
| Property Type | Residential, Residential / Single Family |
| Community | Abiquiu |
| Tract | Unknown |
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The Abiquiu Studio Tour for 2010 will be October 9th, 10th & 11th from 10:00am to 5:oopm each day. This will be the 17th annual Abiquiu Studio Tour with work from over 60 local artists.
Turn the Abiquiu Studio Tour into a vacation. There are MANY things to see and do in the area. Feel like hiking or dipping your feet in the Rio Chama by the Christ in the Desert Monastary? Visit Abiquiu Recreation or Abiquiu Points of Interest for more information on fun things to do while you are here.
Have questions about where to stay? Where to eat? Don’t fret! Read more about local businesses and what they offer up!
The weather is generally mild and fall is in full swing with the cottonwoods glowing. See you on the tour!

Abiquiu is the kind of place you can fall instantly in love with, so when that moment happens visit Abiquiu Homes for Sale or Abiquiu Land for Sale and make it your BACKYARD!
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Las Clinicas del Norte
Next door to Bode’s, this small clinic provides medical services to the community.
US Postal Service – Abiquiu Post Office
Across from Bode’s General Store on Highway 84, 505-685-4660
Abiquiu Elementary School
Highway 84 in Abiquiu, NM
505-685-4457
www.greatschools.org/new…/309-Abiquiu-Elementary-School
Coronado Mid-High School
Gallina, NM
575.638.5491
Espanola Valley High School
Española, NM 87532
505-753-7357
http://www.greatschools.org/new-mexico/espanola/315-Espanola-Valley-High-School
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Christ in the Desert Monastery
This Benedictine Abbey is located in a beautiful and isolated spot on the Chama River. The road is not totally maintained, and is often impassable after snow or rain storms. The monks practice the Benedictine life of prayer, reading, and manual labor which now also include a beautiful scriptorium. http://www.christdesert.org.
Dar al Islam
The North African-style mosque and attached school were constructed in the early 1980’s with the dream of starting a model village showcasing Islam in America. The facility, with a training and worship structure that contains a school, library, elaborate prayer rooms, and living quarters, is dedicated to the betterment of society through education and cooperation. http://www.daralislam.org
Ghost Ranch – It’s all about transformation . . .
In the 1930’s Arthur Pack bought a ranch in northern New Mexico known as Ghost Ranch writing two books about the Ranch and his family’s experiences. The 21,000 acre Ranch was part of a land grant to Pedro Martin Serrano from the King of Spain in 1766. The grant was called Piedra Lumbre (shining rock/stone). The name “Ghost Ranch,” or the local name “El Rancho de los Brujos (witches),” was derived from the many tales of ghosts and legends of hangings in the Ranch’s history. There were many bones to be found in this high desert country, Georgia O’Keeffe painted and displayed them. Paleontologists digging at the Ranch discovered a fully intact Late Triassic Period, theropod dinosaur Coelophysis bauri, that was later designated as the New Mexico State Fossil. In 1955 Arthur and Phoebe Pack, presented the ranch to the Board of Christian Education Presbyterian Church, USA, to be used as a national retreat and education center. www.ghostranch.org
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Abiquiu (AH-bi-kyoo) is a tiny village located on US 84 about 60 miles north of Santa Fe. The village is on a rocky mesa above the Rio Chama at an elevation of 6,060 feet. Pinons dot the side of the mesa. Large cottonwoods grow where water springs from the earth and along the Rio Chama providing a rare lushness in the arid high desert. The pastoral setting is the perfect home for the modern newly built mansion or an adobe that has been here for centuries. La Canada and Barranca neighborhoods are located along the Rio Chama near the village. Acequias are used to irrigate the small fields as they have for centuries to provide pastures for horses, cattle, and sheep. The fertile land yields delectable fruits and vegetables. The white cliffs along the river provide the quiet beauty that attracts those seeking inspiration for their creativity. Most famous of the artists attracted to the area was Georgia O’Keefe who made her home in Abiquiu from 1945 until her death in 1986. One of the highlights of the year is the annual Abiquiu Art Tour showcasing the many artists who have made their home along the Rio Chama. Movie stars enjoy the anonymity that can be had in the area. The scenery is so stunning movies are shot on location. Most recent was the 4th Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
Bode’s General Store has been in business since 1890 and is still the gathering place in Abiquiu. A good meal, gifts, every day grocery and hardware needs, plants, seeds, and household goods are available along with good conversation with the owners or neighbors. Guests experience the charm of the Rio Chama and quietness of Abiquiu in a comfortable casita at Abiquiu Inn. A restaurant offers fine cuisine and the gift shop features work of local artists. Santa Fe and Carson National Forests are adjacent to Abiquiu.
The original village, abandoned in the 1500’s, was the Tewa Indian Pueblo at La Puente about 3 miles SE of the current village. These people are thought to have moved from Mesa Verde in southern Colorado. The first Spanish settlers came in the 1740’s and called the community Santa Rosa de Lina de Abiquiu for their patron saint. After devastating Indian raids the people living in Abiquiu petitioned to move elsewhere. The genizaros (Hispaniciazed Indians) founded the current village in 1747 and named the new village Santo Thomas de Abiquiu. In 1754, the Abiquiu Land Grant of 16,000 acres was given jointly to the genizaros and Spaniards. It is one of the last Spanish-American community grants still functioning and owned by residents of Abiquiu. The descendants of these early settlers are proud of their heritage and continue to practice their traditions, such as the Penitente rites. On a humorous note, there are rumors of witches who give out love potions that keep husbands home at night. In the early 1800’s Abiquiu became the trailhead for the Old Spanish Trail linking Santa Fe and Los Angeles and was the third largest settlement in New Mexico Territory. The Old Spanish Trail was a pack mule route considered by historians to be the” longest, crookedest, most tortuous trail in the nation”. The 1200 mile trip between Los Angeles and Santa Fe took about 3 ½ months. The last caravan was a Mexican pack train in 1848. After the Mexican War the trail was replaced by more southerly routes that could accommodate wagons.
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Some people jump on a plane to vacation. I simply have to jump on a horse and ride out my back gate for a vacation. I grew up on the Rio Chama just south of Abiquiu, NM. To the east of my parents property is BLM (Bureau of Land Management) and to the west is Santa Fe National Forest. It was great and set in motion a passion for the great outdoors on horseback.
My sister and I, who now lives on a cattle ranch in the northern eastern part of New Mexico would head out on rides as soon as we would get home for school. Pretending that we were Ranchers and that on that side of the arroyo was “her” ranch and everything on this side of the arroyo was mine. We managed to never “harass” the local permitees cows too much while still having a blast.
The Santa Fe National Forest encompasses 1.6 million acres of some of the finest scenery in New Mexico. Riding just five miles from US Hwy 84 which continues on to Abiquiu, NM is a fault line erupting from the sandy terrain creating La Ventana (Window Rock). The trail to La Ventana has been a favorite of the locals and Santa Feans for years. Once you ride up the short, steep hill to the arch, the view is out of this world. Directly below you are ponderosa pines, pinons, junipers, oak brush and an earthen dam that collects the water from summer thunderstorms and grows wild sunflowers ten feet tall. Gazing beyond what is just below and in front of you are the Sangre de Cristos gleaming in all their glory.
There are several ways to get to La Ventana, numerous arroyos and cow trails which are all very scenic. The footing is great for horses as well, only a few areas are covered in lava and river rock while the rest is covered in New Mexico beach sand.
Northern New Mexico grabs ahold of your heart and your soul and attaches itself. I should know as I was one of those kids who couldn’t wait to get off to college only to come home to Northern New Mexico and love every minute of it. I currently live in the Ojo Caliente Valley and border the BLM. After a long stressful day, there is nothing more relaxing in my opinion than to head out of the back gate into a wild landscape of more than 55,000 acres with no roads to speak of. Slot canyons, sandstone cliffs, natural springs, elk, deer and other wildlife keep you on the look out. As you ride on the high mesa headed north you can take in the grandeur of O’Keeffe Country.
This New Year’s celebration was one for the history book! Several friends came over and with a full moon over head and snow on the ground, we all decided we should hop on our horses and take a ride. The moon light changes your familiar environment into a new world. As we reached our summit, which was about half way up the side of the Black Mesa I couldn’t believe my eyes. The entire Ojo Caliente River Valley below was visible; you could even see other horses moving about in the moon light. It has started a trend and now we all look forward to the next full moon!
I currently have a property on the Rio Chama about one mile north of where I grew up. It too borders the 55,000 acres of BLM and offers endless opportunities for riding and enjoyment. Northern New Mexico horse property can be difficult to find but worth the wait.
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